Thirty-one families that lost relatives in two fatal crashes of Boeing 737 Max jetliners asked a federal appeals court on Thursday to revive a criminal case against the aircraft manufacturer.
Paul Cassell, a lawyer for the families, urged a three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to overturn a lower court's dismissal of a criminal conspiracy charge Boeing faced for allegedly misleading Federal Aviation Administration regulators about a flight-control system tied to the crashes, which killed 346 people.
The dismissal came at the request of the U.S. government after it reached a deal with Boeing that allowed the company to avoid prosecution in exchange for paying or investing an additional $1.1 billion in fines, compensation for victims' families, and internal safety and quality measures.
Cassell said Thursday that federal prosecutors violated the families' rights by failing to properly consult them before striking the deal and shutting them out of the process.
Federal prosecutors countered that, for years, the government, ''has solicited and weighed the views of the crash victims' families as it's decided whether and how to prosecute the Boeing Company.''
More than a dozen family members attended Thursday's hearing in New Orleans, and Cassell said many more ''around the globe" listened to a livestream of the arguments.
''I feel that there wouldn't be meaningful accountability without a trial,'' Paul Njoroge said in a statement after the hearing. Njoroge, who lives in Canada, lost his entire family in the second of the two crashes — his wife, Carolyne, their children, ages 6, 4 and 9 months, and his mother-in-law.
All passengers and crew died when the 737 Max jets crashed less than five months apart in 2018 and 2019 — a Lion Air flight that plunged into the sea off the coast of Indonesia and an Ethiopian Airlines flight that crashed into a field shortly after takeoff.